Suicides
have Greeks on edge before election
On
Monday, a 38-year-old geology lecturer hanged himself from a lamp
post in Athens and on the same day a 35-year-old priest jumped to his
death off his balcony in northern Greece. On Wednesday, a 23-year-old
student shot himself in the head
28
April, 2012
In
a country that has had one of the lowest suicide rates in the world,
a surge in the number of suicides in the wake of an economic crisis
has shocked and gripped the Mediterranean nation - and its media -
before a May 6 election.
The
especially grisly death of pharmacist Dimitris Christoulas, who shot
himself in the head on a central Athens square because of poverty
brought on by the crisis that has put millions out of work, was by
far the most dramatic.
Before
shooting himself during morning rush hour on April 4 on Syntagma
Square across from the Greek parliament building, the 77-year-old
pensioner took a moment to jot down a note.
"I
see no other solution than this dignified end to my life so I don't
find myself fishing through garbage cans for sustenance," wrote
Christoulas, who has since become a national symbol of the
austerity-induced pain that is squeezing millions.
Greek
media have since reported similar suicides almost daily, worsening a
sense of gloom going into next week's election, called after Prime
Minister Lucas Papademos's interim government completed its mandate
to secure a new rescue deal from foreign creditors by cutting
spending further.
Some
medical experts say this form of political suicide is a reflection of
the growing despair and sense of helplessness many feel. But others
warn the media may be amplifying the crisis mood with its coverage
and numbers may only be up slightly.
"The
crisis has triggered a growing sense of guilt, a loss of self-esteem
and humiliation for many Greeks," Nikos Sideris, a leading
psychoanalyst and author in Athens, told Reuters.
"Greek
people don't want to be a burden to anyone and there's this growing
sense of helplessness. Some develop an attitude of self-hatred and
that leads to self-destruction. That's what's behind the increase in
suicide and attempted suicide. We're seeing a whole new category:
political suicides."
Police
said the geology lecturer, Nikos Polyvos, who hanged himself, was
distraught because a teaching job offer had been blocked due to a
blanket hiring freeze in the public sector.
NATION
IN SHOCK
Experts
say the numbers are relatively low - less than about 600 per year.
But increases in suicides, attempted suicides, the use of
anti-depressant medication and the need for psychiatric care are
causing alarm in a nation unaccustomed to the problems.
Before
the financial crisis began wreaking havoc in 2009, Greece had one of
the lowest suicide rates in the world - 2.8 per 100,000 inhabitants.
There was a 40 percent rise in suicides in the first half of 2010,
according to the Health Ministry.
There
are no reliable statistics on 2011 but experts say Greece's suicide
rate has probably doubled to about 5 per 100,000. That is still far
below levels of 34 per 100,000 seen in Finland or 9 per 100,000 in
Germany. Attempted suicides and demand for psychiatric help has risen
as Greece struggles to cope with the worst economic crisis since
World War Two.
Nikiforos
Angelopoulos, a professor of psychiatry, has a busy psychotherapy
practice in an upmarket Athens neighborhood. He said the crisis has
exacerbated the problems for some already less stable people and
estimates that about five percent of his patients have developed
problems due to the crisis.
"We're
a nation in shock," he said, even though he suspected that it
was the media coverage of suicides that had increased dramatically
rather than the actual numbers of suicides. He nevertheless says the
crisis is behind a notable rise in mental health problems in Greece.
"I
had one patient who came in with a severe depression - he owns a
furniture making company that got into financial trouble and he had
to lay off 20 of his 100 workers," he said. "He couldn't
sleep and couldn't eat because of that. He said his good business was
being ruined and he couldn't cope anymore."
The
furniture maker spent four months in therapy and was also helped by
anti-depressants, Angelopoulos said.
"He's
better now. He realized what happened just happened. But there are
many others who are unstable or psychotic to begin with and the
crisis is increasing their anxiety and insecurity."
Angelopoulos,
60, has also suffered himself because about 20 percent of his
patients can no longer afford his 100 euro ($130) per hour sessions.
Some have asked for a half-price discount while others tell him they
simply can't afford to pay anything.
"I
never turn people away," he said. "If a patient says to me
'I have no money', I couldn't tell them to go away. I tell them okay
you don't have to pay now but remember me later."
HAPPY
GREEKS?
There
are several possible explanations for Greece's low suicide rate that
go beyond the fact that the country has an abundance of sunshine and
balmy weather.
To
avoid stigmatizing their families, some suicidal Greeks deliberately
crash their cars, which police often charitably report as accidents.
Families often try to cover up a suicide so their loved ones can be
buried because the Greek Orthodox church refuses to officiate at
burials of people who commit suicide.
Another
important factor behind the low suicide rate is that Greeks have
extremely close knit families as well as a highly communicative and
expressive culture.
"Greece
is a country where everyone will talk to you," said Sideris, the
Athens psychoanalyst. "You'll always find someone to share your
suffering with and someone's always there to help.
"It's
not only the good weather. It's the powerful network of support that
has made the suicide rate in Greece so low. It's still there but this
crisis is still too much for some people."
Many
Greeks have also not lost their sense of humor.
Dimitris
Nikolopoulos, a 37-year-old salesman, laughed at the idea that the
suicide rate was so low because Greeks are well-adjusted and a
generally happy people.
"Greeks
used to be very happy people because we were living off money that
didn't belong to us," he said with a wry smile. "But
sometimes you have to face reality. It wasn't our money."
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